Hot Rod Girl/T-Bird Gang. |
Hot Rod Girl is one half of a dollar double feature
DVD that Boz sent to me as a gift. I tried to watch both films on the DVD and the
other film, T-Bird Gang, was underwhelming I actually fell asleep during
that one. But Hot Rod Girl is a different story.
Hot Rod Girl, Miss Lisa Vernon. |
It starts with a bang at the drag strip where Miss Lisa
Vernon is hauling toward the finish line in her T-Bird before the opening
credits have even finished rolling. The announcer confirms she has won yet
another race.
Far from your typical crazed street-racer, Lisa Vernon is actually
an All-American girl, as wholesome as they come. And it turns out, all the good
kids in this town get their kicks at the drag strip, rather than terrorizing
the public streets. But guess what? The public is clueless and is pressuring
the city council to shut the strip down!
The hot rod gang. |
After the race, we meet Lisa's crew, Steve, Flat-Top, and her
responsible boyfriend, Jeff.
Oh! And in the background for just a few seconds – blink and you’ll miss it - a car rolls by with 666 painted on the door! Spooky!
666. |
They're all planning to hit up Yo-Yo’s, the local teen
hangout; but Steve, the youngest hot rodder, is stuck at home because his hot
rod hating Aunt Sarah has him on lockdown. Aunt Sarah is basically a human speed
bump in Steve’s life.
Jeff: "How about you, Steve?"
Steve: "Gee, I'd love to....but every time I come to
the strip, Aunt Sarah puts a stopwatch on me...I'll be glad when I'm old enough
to move in with you. She's strictly horse & buggy. She doesn't dig hot rods
at all!"
The older gearheads chuckle affectionately. Then Jeff agrees to ride with Steve to diagnose a troublesome engine noise.
Anti-drag racing poster. |
Now we meet the hot-rodders' friend, Ben. Ben is a little
older, wears a suit and a hat, and is in a position of some authority with the
local police force. Ben is at his city councilman's office discussing the
drag-strip. Teen hot-rodding is public enemy #1 in this town and the city
councilman’s whole office is basically a shrine to automobile accidents,
including a huge poster of a horrible car accident on his office wall!
Councilman: "I've seen too much!"
Ben: "If you come out to the strip & get to know
the kids..."
Councilman: "No thanks! That's your headache!!"
Long story short, Ben's trying to keep the strip alive,
arguing that it keeps the kids off the streets. After some persuasion, the
councilman reluctantly agrees.
Next, we’re cruising around town with Jeff & Steve. Jeff
doesn't hear the engine sound Steve was complaining about.
Steve: "If I could really open it up..."
Then Jeff gets VERY serious and interjects, "At the
racetrack!" Jeff is the voice of reason.
Steve starts in about his Aunt Sarah again - "Living with her is like driving with your breaks on!...Slow down!...Stop!...That's the story of my life!"
And then, out of nowhere, a blond Eddie Haskell lookalike
pulls up next to them, revving his engine like a madman. Steve calls him a
squirrel, and this dude lives up to it, weaving, laughing, and generally being
a jackass. The stranger continues to gawk at them, revving his engine and
laughing. It's a pretty funny scene.
Jeff advises, "Ignore him, Steve...Play it smart! He's looking for trouble - disappoint him."
Road rage. |
But then, things take a wild turn. The squirrel driver backs
into their car – twice – at a stop sign, all while cackling like a maniac! Who
even does that?
That's it, Steve's had enough, and it's road rage o'clock.
They crash, and Steve doesn't make it. Jeff's in pieces, the councilman calls
the car a 'hopped-up death trap,' and the whole town goes apeshit.
Sadness. |
Yo-Yo's. |
The scene shifts to Yo-Yo's some time later. Everyone is
there, but guess what? Jeff is missing in action. The opening segment of this
scene is pretty hilarious and cannot be captured in still screen captures. It's
showing close-ups of the kids' ecstatic faces as they blissfully listen to jazz
records. It's the funniest part of the movie, in my opinion.
Lisa is the only one still talking about the drag strip
since Jim has withdrawn into work.
Lisa: "You know, if they close the strip, the next step
will be to outlaw all hot rods."
Flat-Top: "Aww...so let 'em, if it'll make the squares happy."
"LP" and her man. |
Next, we meet LP, which is short for Long-Playing Record.
Because she talks a lot.
LP: "They wouldn't dare! My whole wardrobe is designed
around the drag strip!"
Nobody takes LP seriously. Whenever she talks too much,
they're all like, "Oh, LP! Flip the record!"
They discuss Jeff's absence. LP, who is apparently
promiscuous, suggests she could probably get him back.
LP: "People respond to me in a different way than they
do to normal girls."
The discussion turns to illegal non-strip racing and Lisa
walks out on everybody and chaos ensues.
Flat-Top, feeling a little squirrely without Jeff's sober
presence, hands Yo-Yo a Canadian dime! Yo-Yo's like, 'Hey, this is a Canadian
dime!' And Flat-Top's comeback? 'So? Take a trip!' Classic Flat-Top.
Now, we're in Jeff's garage, and he's burning the midnight oil as a mechanic.
Jeff's boss: "You're looking tired, Jeff."
Jeff: "I like being tired."
Jeff's boss: "Yeah, I know."
"Do you think it's easy for me to come here?" |
But hold up, this melodrama's interrupted when Lisa makes an
entrance, determined to crack Jeff's shell.
She hits him with, 'Don't you think I have my pride? Do you
think it's easy for me to come here?'
Jeff finally explains he feels responsible for Steve's death
because he's the one who souped up Steve's car for him.
Jeff: "Every time I open the hood of a car and see the
engine, I think of the engine I built for him!"
Lisa: "Trying to kill yourself with work isn't going to
bring him back!"
Lisa warns Jeff that Flat-Top and the other kids "are starting to act up" without his guidance, but Jeff just can't deal with that right now.
Talbot. |
Now, meet Talbot, the new guy in town with an ear-piercing
engine. He's all over Lisa, but she's not having any of it.
Talbot: "They told me this was a friendly town."
Lisa: "I'm the exception."
As Talbot leaves Yo-Yo's, he declares, 'When I get my coffee pot perkin’, maybe I can teach some of you cats a lesson!' Confidence level: through the roof.
Lisa, Judy, & Flat-Top talking shit. |
Talbot fancies himself a great driver, but he doesn't take good care of his car at all.
When he talks to Jeff at the garage, he affirms,
"I'm here for service, not a sermon! It's my heap and I'll do with it as I
please!"
Back at Yo-Yo's, Talbot pulls the ultimate party foul – he
unplugs the jukebox, killing everyone's tunes and losing their credits, just so
he can talk. What a dick.
But wait, Jeff makes his grand entrance! He tells Yo-Yo, 'No trouble, just music.' Ah, sweet reunion.
Feeling pressured, Talbot just flat-out challenges the whole
gang to a game of chicken.
Yo-Yo, the owner of Yo-Yo’s, looks to the sky and asks the
gods, "Why do I have to run a hangout for lunatics?"
Talbot at the wheel. |
Flat-Top at the other wheel. |
Then Ben swoops in to chew them all out: 'One more hot rod accident, and you ALL lose your licenses!' The stakes are high.
Lisa's & Jeff's make-up scene. |
Now, get ready for some romance. Jeff and Lisa are in his
apartment, things are heating up, and Jeff, the poster child of moral
responsibility, tells Lisa, “I think you'd better go.”
Lisa's like, 'Can I at least get my coffee first?' Jeff's reply? 'I'll buy you a cup tomorrow.' They both smile, suggesting that if Lisa stays one more minute, Jeff is going to lose control and try to have sex with her, so she’s got to go. Jeff & Lisa embody the ideal of American 1950s virtue.
Now that Jeff is no longer working himself to death, he is
able to get all the kids back out to the drag strip where they belong.
Talbot's ultimatum. |
Ben finds Talbot sitting around in Yo-Yo's by himself trying
to figure out where Lisa is. Upon learning she is at the racetrack with
everyone else, Talbot flies off like a bat out of hell.
Ben follows him and arrests him for speeding and gives him
an ultimatum: 'Come to the drag strip and see how real hot rodders roll, or
face reckless driving charges.'
But when they get to the track, Jeff's not having it. He
says Talbot's car is a deathtrap, and things go south real quick. Talbot flips
out, threatens Jeff, and vows to get revenge.
Dangerous recklessness. |
Later, as Jeff and Lisa are driving around, Talbot approaches from the rear and keeps veering in front of them, trying to piss them off. During this nonsense, a bicycle rider is hit and killed. Jeff and Lisa aren't sure who hit him, but Talbot is sure it was Jeff. The City Councilman is so pissed, he fires Ben and closes the drag strip. Soon all hot rods will be outlawed.
Approaching Talbot. |
Not one to wallow in self pity (unlike Jeff after Steve's
death), Ben is hard at work collecting a paint sample from Talbot's car. He
then approaches Talbot, who is sitting alone drinking a soda at Yo-Yo's.
Ben informs Talbot his inspection of the accident site
reveals Jeff's skid marks ending 50 feet before the kid while Talbot's go right
through the impact point. He also thinks Talbot's car finish matches marks
found on the boy.
Talbot responds by standing up and smashing Ben over the head with a bottle!
Brawl at Yo-Yo's. |
Then, Jeff runs in and beats the shit out of Talbot.
Everyone agrees Talbot's actions suggest he is guilty. Ben says, "I have to go see a man about a badge", implying he will get his job back since he was able to determine the accident was Talbot's fault.
Nursing Jim's wounds. |
Commentary - The title is a little misleading, as the "hot rod girl" is really just a supporting character. The movie isn’t terrible, but could use a little more action. The "chicken" scene is badass as is the scene leading up to Steve's death, but highlights like that are few and far between. As part of a 2-for-$1 DVD though, especially one that was given to me for free, I can't complain at all about Hot Rod Girl.
[ Reviewed March, 2006. ]
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